Literature DB >> 16538549

Recognition of inflected words in a morphologically limited language: frequency effects in monolinguals and bilinguals.

Minna Lehtonen1, Helge Niska, Erling Wande, Jussi Niemi, Matti Laine.   

Abstract

The effect of word frequency on the processing of monomorphemic vs. inflected words was investigated in a morphologically relatively limited language, Swedish, with two participant groups: early Finnish-Swedish bilinguals and Swedish monolinguals. The visual lexical decision results of the monolinguals suggest morphological decomposition with low-frequency inflected nouns, while with medium- and high-frequency inflections, full-form processing was apparently employed. The bilinguals demonstrated a similar pattern. The results suggest that morpheme-based recognition is employed even in a morphologically limited language when the inflectional forms occur rarely. With more frequent inflectional forms, full-form representations have developed for both mono- and bilingual speakers. In a comparable study employing a morphologically rich language, Finnish, Lehtonen and Laine (2003, Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 6, 213-225) observed full-form access only at the high-frequency range and only for monolinguals. These differences suggest that besides word frequency and language background, the morphological richness of a language affects the processing mode employed with polymorphemic words.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16538549     DOI: 10.1007/s10936-005-9008-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Psycholinguist Res        ISSN: 0090-6905


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